Sat, 21 Mar 2009
Chemnitz Linux Days 2009
This is my fourth CLT report and they surely are becoming repetitive! But every good event deserves a good report, so here goes:
Contrary to previous years we already arrived on Friday this year. Since we were also not up for another stint with the gym (Aaah the sissifying effects of marriage!) we booked a room with a nice little guesthouse about 15 bus-minutes from the venue.
The conference was great as ever:
- Speakers, booth personel and visitors were taken very good care of, there was nothing left to be desired
- Organisation was exicellent, no (noticable) technical difficulties, no scheduling problems, a helpful staff member literally every 5 meters
- A broad variety of very well-chosen talks from total beginner's to very sophisticated topics
- Several accompanying social events including the 2nd Night of Free Films
- A broad variety of exhibitors from small to large projects, both commercial and non commercial. CLT manages very well to be a community event that feels fun and almost like a family meeting but at the same time instills a sense of seriousness and respectability
I usually visit the CLT mostly for networking but I also managed to see a few talks. I moderated the session on High Performance and got to see three very nice talks on GPU programing, cluster computing and parallel programming.
This year also featured the first talk
on (the lack of) women in Free Software. Unusually enough this one was
even given by a man. I was quite curious about that talk, which was (how
fitting!) scheduled in direct succession to my own. I am kind of torn on
that topic myself. On one hand women in Free Software is a topic that is
very important to me and deserves any attention it can get. On the other
hand instead of talking about how evenly capable women are in Free Software
I'd rather just demonstrate it, for instance by giving a good Free Software
related talk. And instead of talking about how there should be more women
in Free Software I'd rather just be one and try to encourage others with my
example. The usual quota of female speakers at linux events is somewhere
between 2-4% and I just don't like the idea of having a conference with
n men talking about Free Software and 1 woman talking about
women. I've had these settings before and it just doesn't sit well with me.
Because of this I was quite please to find the topic being tackled by a man
this time.
The talk itself, in my impression, left a few open issues though. It was
rather brief and focussed mainly on stating the usual numbers, asserting
that the Women in FLOSS movement wasn't about affirmative action or
discriminating men and explaining how women feel discriminated by sexist
behaviour and advertising and how objection to such things should not be
mistaken as prudery. It's general advice on how to improve the quota of
women in FLOSS mostly boiled down to the linuxchix slogan "Be Polite. Be
Helpful.". What I missed most was practical advice to projects wishing
to attract more female contributors, such as mentoring programs or
low-threshold entry points. Also I felt that the talk lacked a real
motivation beyond "gender balance is a Good Thing". However, I was glad the
topic finally found its way into the CLT as well and I had a couple of very
interesting discussions afterwards.
Concerning my own talk I was rather satisfied as well. Attendance was - as usually in Chemnitz - very good, according to the organisers I got around 200 people. Since I designed the talk as a collaborative project and its feedback was predominantly good I'll continue developing it with the feedback I got and submit it again to other events. I think the topic is very worthwile and there's still a lot in it. Some people asked for a more collaborative way of contributing their thoughts and ideas so I'll just create a wiki to collect the new ideas. I'll of course announce it here as soon as it's in place. The slides and audio recording (both German) are as usually available from the talks page at CLT or my own talks section.
Posted at: 23:14 in /english/debian/events
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